Jump to content

III (Orbital EP)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iseetheproblem (talk | contribs) at 15:31, 22 June 2023 (Correction to event name<ref>Trouble Songs: Music and Conflict In Northern Ireland. Stuart Bailie (1 May 2018) ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1527220478</ref>). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

III
EP by
Released7 January 1991
Recorded1990
GenreElectronica
LabelFFRR
ProducerP&P Hartnoll
Orbital EP chronology
III
(1991)
Mutations EP
(1992)

III is an EP released by the techno duo Orbital. The title has a double meaning, referring to it being their third single release, and having three tracks. Two of the group's best known tracks, "Satan" and "Belfast", made their first appearances on the EP. "Belfast" was first discovered by David Holmes and Ian McCready when they booked Orbital to play their "Space Base 4" night at the Art College in Belfast on 12 May 1990[1]. Orbital left a demo tape which included the track that was subsequently named "Belfast" in recognition of the positive experience they'd had in the city.[2]

Samples

"Satan" features samples from "Sweat Loaf" by punk band Butthole Surfers.

"Belfast" uses a sample of soprano Emily Van Evera performing "O Euchari" from the Gothic Voices album A Feather on the Breath of God. The same sample had appeared on The Beloved's hit "The Sun Rising" a year earlier, but had not been credited.

"LC1" includes a sample of television presenter Fred Dinenage reading a report of an alleged alien abduction.

Other versions

Orbital's 1996 single Satan Live includes a version of "Satan" called "Satan (Industry Standard Edit)", as well as live versions recorded at New York City's Irving Plaza and at the V96 Festival in Chelmsford.

In 1997, Orbital re-recorded Satan with Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett, for the Spawn movie soundtrack.[3]

In 1999, Orbital released "Belfast (Sasha vs The Light Remix)" and "Nothing Left" as a double-A side 12 inch vinyl,[4] and a rejected remix, "Belfunk", was released on Sasha's Xpander EP.

In 2015, Paul Hartnoll shared a 4 track demo version of "Belfast" from 1990 on his blog, along with "The Other One", an unfinished demo made with elements of "Chime" and "Belfast".[5]

In December of 2021, during the promotion of their then upcoming 2022 remix/rework compilation album "30 Something" duo released the "30 Something Years Later" Mix of the track, based around the current live iteration of the song.

Accolades

Q Magazine chose "Belfast" as one of its 1001 Best Songs ever.[6]

Track listing

CD and 12" vinyl version

"Satan"
"LC1"
"Belfast"

7" vinyl version

"Satan"
"Belfast"

12" remix version

"Satan (The Rhyme & Reason Vocal Mix)"
"LC2 (Outer Limits Mix)"
"Chime"

30 Something Years Later Mix version

"Satan (30 Something Years Later Mix)" "Satan (30 Something Years Later Mix - Edit)"

References

  1. ^ Wray, Daniel Dylan (2020-01-01). "Sugar Sweet: the pilled-up rave that united Belfast during the Troubles". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  2. ^ "Orbital And The 'Belfast' Story". Across the line. 2016-03-08. Retrieved 2016-09-12.
  3. ^ "Spawn: The Album [Original Soundtrack] - Original Soundtrack | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  4. ^ "Orbital – Belfast / Nothing Left". Discogs. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  5. ^ Hartnoll, Paul. "Belfast and the Other one". paul hartnoll | starting again.
  6. ^ Q Magazine - 1001 Bet Songs Ever - Rocklist.net